(ThyBlackMan.com) I have always wondered what was the importance and utility of Africana Studies Departments around the Nation, as well the utility of a doctorate in such a field. Over recent weeks I have come to the personal conclusion that there value in the grand scope of collective community betterment is miniscule. This has been personified in recent weeks through the unmerited recapitulation of what some may call the West-Obama narrative.
First, this is not a question of intellect or lack thereof, for I do note the brilliance in many current public relations scholars including but not limited to Cornell West, Eric Dyson, or a Melissa Harris-Perry. But what is more than oblivious is the overt need of such persons to be heard and seen, all scholarship aside.
Now it may just be my locution that is misplaced – one that sees intellectuals as being scientist and researchers first over the pedantic. Although I too am considered to be an intellectual by many, most see me as a scientist first, as my research abides by scientific methods although my academic training is in psychology and statistics. However, I see such rigor lacking in the work of many that proclaim the banner of Africana Studies.
In past regardless of discipline, if one expertise was history, religion, sociology, chemistry or biology, their natural science or philosophy was justification enough to document their intellectual prowess in their said field even when it entailed the study of Africans and their descendants.
The discourse attributed between the confederates of both sides of the West-Obama discussion reflects all that is wrong with the cannon of Africana studies intellectualism. It is an aspersion that one the one side portrays a dismaying senescence and on the other, an “inchoate mutterings” to use the words of Howard Thurman. They miss the need of oration for the sake of science singular for the mundaneness of sound bites and public relations.
Strange it is to me, that when I am called to NIH by a Nora Volkov (Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse) for example for my expertise in infectious disease, I never see representatives of Africana studies. Strange it is that John Hope Franklin, Howard Thurman, W.E.B Dubois or Benjamin E. Mays never claimed the banner of Africana or Black studies. Frantz Fanon was a Psychiatrist, Dubois a Historian and economist, Charles Drew, a Chemist, yet all considered them scientist of their discipline first who served their race through their science.
Even our greatest minds, who did not attend universities, were developed in a discipline like John Henrik Clarke, Fredrick Douglass and Booker T. Washington. Now, there are some scientists that do such that happen to be of African descent who place their discipline of study to better their race without using race as a jumping point. Economist Roland G. Fryer Jr is one example.
I know some would assert I am or may be jealous, but truth be told, I couldn’t tell you about any of the work most in Africana or black studies do. And it has nothing to do with where they work. I mean I was on faculty and conducted research at Emory University for 14 years, and from where was department head in the department of Community and Preventative Medicine at Morehouse School of Medicine. But they are not the folk I look up to and no where close to a Chekih Anta Diop, who was a physicist, chemist and paleontologist as well as historian.
I respect the intellectualism of any scholar, but I will use my science to solve problems and proffer discussion to solve problems as opposed to speak for the purpose of being heard or to propound that I am blacker than another person. For the simple truth remains that such does nothing to tackle food inflation, the 21 percent of children living in poverty in America, the inordinate disparity of disease and incarceration in our community or that somewhere in the world someone starves to death every 3.6 seconds, and 75 percent of those are children under the age of five.
Yes, I may be wrong but I was taught scholarship and intellectualism was to serve the needs of the people, not the self. So I advise all considering doctorate degrees to avoid a PHD in black studies, we need more in math, chemistry and physics, for we are top heave in pedantic who expound expertise in the study of the color black.
Written By Torrance Stephens
Official website; http://rawdawgb.blogspot.com/
How you move from West and Obama to an attack on Black and Africana Studies amazes me, especially since neither of them has a degree in, specializes in, nor is even a proponent of the field. Aside from your need of an editor in your convoluted writing I also recommend you do more research on the subject before you speak – or should I say write- on the subject.
Black studies was created because of the call of students themselves to be educated about the history of people of African descent; a history that includes our involvement in all the disciplines – scientific and humanistic. I’m surprised that you would even make such a statement, considering studies in education and psychology – your disciplines- have proven that children take a more active interest in learning when they see historical figures, ethos and realities that mirror their own. Black studies is necessary because, for 12 plus years, Black and White people alike see nothing that validates Black existence reflected in the educational system, save the same tired images of Martin, the march on Washington, Civil Rights and slavery – and maybe Malcolm X (rebranded as a Civil Rights leader instead of as a pro-human rights,Black nationalist as he described himself).
Black people are so much more than that. And, as to teachers of the discipline speaking too much – which again, neither Cornel West nor President Obama exemplify- I again defer you to the reason Black Studies was created; that is to reach beyond the stale and staid halls of academia, to reach out to the community and address its concerns via the bully pulpit of the professor’s rostrum, thereby teaching students how to use their education and training back in their communities in a way that is relevant to the realities of Black life in America. Black Studies is not just academic, it is very much a outgrowth of Black politics and, if anything, its teachers are much too quiet!
We face inexcusable unemployment rates for Black males and teens, consistently rank highest among groups affected with various fatal diseases and, after 40 plus years of Black Studies in colleges, still do not have an education that includes the story of Blacks and other groups contributions to the world’s history, both in the liberal arts and sciences. Black Studies professors are the recipients of their positions because of student outrage and protests and should be even more vocal and involved in both the discourse and the actions necessary to affect needed change.
Not unlike other seemingly less important areas of study and professionalism, these intellectuals are necessary, and do more than just get drunk at the sound of their own voices. To the intellectually challenged they often pose more questions than answers…leading to more in depth searches for clues to the mysteries they present….fostering a more learned culture, just by commenting on a topic. I admit, I don’t always agree with their views, but I too find myself challenged to do more research on my own, to uncover the untaught hidden truths that have plagued our people for so long. I don’t like when their view is deemed THE view of our people, but I’m glad someone is there to add a little “Black” perspective….
Interesting comments. However, none of the professors you mention have doctorates in Black Studies. They all were trained in standard disciplines. Also, in your last sentence you champion the study of math, chemistry and physics. So is yours a critique of the humanities and social sciences? Also, it would seem that anyone who is on the top on television, be they an academic, a minister, or a financial analyst or whatever are representative of the people in their field. They are the cream of the crop of the camera hungry crowd in their line of endeavor.